Topics for the water cooler and then some
Is it profiteering — or justice?
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on the likelihood of ending an estrangement and whether to return a repaid debt.
When my daughter’s delivery went off the script I had imagined, it made me wonder about what we ask from our birth stories.
Dramatic video showed boulders rolling down into a valley in Himachal Pradesh state in the Himalayas.
The move would reduce the size of the bets that investors can make by lowering the amount of leverage it offers to 20 times from 101 times.
With the militants making advances across Afghanistan, the top American general there suggested that airstrikes may continue, even with the U.S. troop pullout largely completed.
Mr. Moses developed a reputation for extraordinary calm in the face of violence as he helped to register thousands of voters and trained a generation of activists in Mississippi in the early 1960s.
Back-alley firms meddle in elections and promote falsehoods on behalf of clients who can claim deniability, escalating our era of unreality.
Education
How the system is shaped
Health & Fitness
Health news and expert advice
Studies Show
What medical research really says
Cultural progressives need to choose between using their new power for liberation or regulation.
On a baseball pilgrimage in Brooklyn, how the Bronx inspired and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
In “A Farewell to Gabo and Mercedes,” Rodrigo Garcia chronicles his parents’ final days, including his celebrated father’s struggle with dementia and his mother’s fierce independence to the end.
Summer camps have reopened into a tight labor market without the international seasonal workers they often depend on.
The beloved children’s author and illustrator died in May. But his irrepressible spirit lives on in his books.
Kalisz and Jay Litherland went 1-2 in the 400-meter individual medley.
Thousands of people attended the Budapest Pride march, defying efforts by the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban to marginalize the country’s L.G.B.T.Q. community.
Edwin Jackson played on 14 M.L.B. teams, a record. His next (and potentially last) stop is Tokyo for the Olympics.
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